• Song Database
  • Albums
  • Print Collections
  • External Links
Mainsail Café / Songs / Eight Bells

Eight Bells

Suggest changes Random song
Lyrics
Information
Melody
Share

Watches in the Merchant Service were of four hours duration. One blow is struck on the bell for each half hour, i.e. one blow for the first, two for the second, and so on, until the end of the four hours, which makes eight bells. The watches are then changed.

This song was well known in the 1800s, especially aboard British whalers. In Arctic whalers, the lookout position was inside barrel at the masthead, offering some protection from the elements. In the South Pacific, according to Stan Hugill,

...the barrel was not required. Mouth South Seas seamen had another set of crosstrees above the normal topmast crosstrees, part way up the t'gallant mast. Above these again, secured to the royal mast, were two hoops, in which the lookout stood with his feet on the t'gallant crosstrees.

Our protagonist, at least in Hugill's variant, is one of these whalermen "in the hoops".

Direct link:

Temporarily disabled. Sorry. Please use the contact form in the sidebar.

My husband's a saucy foretop man,
A chum of the cook's don't you know?
He put his hand down the cook's funnel,
And shouted "come up from below!"

Ch: Eight bells, eight bells, rouse out there the watch from below,
Eight bells, eight bells, rouse out there the watch from below!

My husband shipping in a whaler,
And sailed to the far Northern Seas;
But being a bold-hearted sailor,
He cared not for ice, sea, or breeze.

At the end of each watch though his fancy
Was to get to his bunk quickly, oh!
For he wanted to dream of his Nancy,
So called to the watch "hi, below!"

But now he's no longer a sailor
He often wakes up in the night
And thinking he's still on the whaler
Calls out with the greatest delight:

From Sailors' Songs or "Chanties" by Frederick J. Davis and Ferris Tozer (1886)

Metadata

Forecastle song, Whaling song

Explore similar songs

  • The Whaleman's Lament Whaling song
  • Blow Ye Winds In The Morning Whaling song
  • Derby Ram Forecastle song
  • Limejuice Ship Forecastle song
  • Grey Funnel Line Forecastle song
Mainsail Café, 2025 Contact